How to watch AEW All Out 2023: PPV, live stream, international markets

Ready to go All Out after you just went All In? Here’s all you need to know to watch AEW’s big show from Chicago this weekend.

Don’t think All In was all the pro wrestling you could handle? AEW will present a pay-per-view for the second consecutive weekend, as All Out will grace the United Center in Chicago.

In the leadup to the show, CM Punk and Jack Perry’s backstage incident at All In has marred what should have been one of AEW’s biggest weeks yet. Both men have reportedly been suspended pending an investigation into the conflict, which likely takes them off All Out.

What it will mean for Punk and Perry’s respective AEW careers moving forward remains unknown, but heading into a show they should have been on, it remains a topic of conversation.

As for actual pro wrestling, Kenny Omega and Konosuke Takeshita will finally settle their months-long feud with a singles match at All Out, with Don Callis in Takeshita’s corner. Anticipation is high for this match, which promises to be full of hijinks and should provide one of the night’s best stories.

After countless verbal barbs from the savage Christian Cage, Darby Allin will try to win the TNT Championship from Luchasaurus. With momentum on his side from a win over Cage and Swerve Strickland at All In, Allin has a third title reign in mind for a belt that has been hot-potatoed for most of its existence.

The action will transpire from Chicago on Sunday evening. Here’s everything you need to know to watch All Out:

AEW All In 2023

UNITED STATES AND CANADA

  • Cable TV: Available on all major U.S. & Canadian providers, including Xfinity, Spectrum, Contour, Fios, U-verse and Optimum, among others (U.S.); Rogers, Bell, Shaw, SaskTel and TELUS (Canada)
  • Satellite TV: DIRECTV and DISH
  • Digital Streaming: Bleacher Report (Web, Mobile, Roku, Xbox, FireTV,  Apple TV)

Bar & Restaurant locations

  • Select Dave & Buster’s locations
  • Select Tom’s Watch Bar locations

International Markets

  • Cable/Satellite providers in Canada
  • FITE​​.TV
  • YouTube (Canada, Mexico, Germany, Italy, France, UK, South Korea)
  • PPV.com (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, UK and Ireland)
  • SKY Germany – (Germany)
  • SKY Italia – (Italy)
  • DAZN (UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Netherlands, Mexico, Brazil, France, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, Poland, Portugal,

AEW suspends CM Punk, Jack Perry for All In backstage incident

Sports Illustrated confirmed earlier reports from several outlets that both wrestlers were disciplined after confronting each other in London.

Update: Aug. 29, 10:45 a.m.: Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated reported today that AEW has indeed suspended CM Punk and Jack Perry for their altercation during All In, pending an internal investigation:

CM Punk and Jack Perry have both been suspended for an altercation before the start of the All In pay-per-view, Sports Illustrated has confirmed.

Original post follows.

Fightful Select (subscription required but recommended) reported Sunday that backstage at AEW All In, CM Punk and Jack Perry were involved in an altercation shortly before Punk’s match with Samoa Joe. Perry said on camera during his Zero Hour pre-show match Sunday, “It’s real glass, cry me a river,” in reference to his alleged conflict with Punk earlier this summer, and it ignited another incident between the two.

Now, it seems both men will pay the consequences. According to Wrestling Observer’s Bryan Alvarez, Punk and Perry are believed to be suspended by AEW pending the results of an investigation, which means neither man will be involved at Sunday’s All Out pay-per-view.

According to Fightful Select, Perry allegedly “stepped in” Punk’s face and “bumped” him, before Punk reportedly “choked” him. There was no word on who broke up the fight.

Another side said Punk threw the first punch, while other accounts say that Punk initiated things. After exchanging words, Punk allegedly stepped up to Perry, got in his face and put Perry in a front facelock before the altercation was broken up.

PWInsider reported that Perry was asked to leave while Punk stayed for a little while after his match with before departing. Nick Hausman of Haus of Wrestling added that Punk left Wembley Stadium on his own, understanding the situation wasn’t good and not wanting to escalate things further.

If Punk and Perry are indeed suspended, it’s not likely AEW will make any official announcement to that effect. The company notably never confirmed suspensions for Punk and The Elite after their physical confrontation following All In 2023.

The United Center in Chicago will host All Out, and in Punk’s hometown of Chicago, AEW would have likely given him a significant role in the show. He defeated Samoa Joe at All In and still holds the Real World Championship, so any plans for fallout moving forward will seemingly halt.

This also takes Punk off Collision, which is in Chicago the night before All Out. That means the rabid wrestling fans of the Windy City will miss out on their top star twice.

At All In, Hook defeated Perry to win the FTW Championship. If the story were to continue, that is obviously now on hold due to the investigation.

We will have to wait and see what happens next as this developing story continues to affect All Out, which is just days away, and how it impacts Perry and Punk’s respective standing in AEW moving forward.

AEW All In takeaways: Analyzing the biggest moments from a historic event

AEW All In London was an unforgettable night at Wembley Stadium. Here are the moments that stood out most.

We have heard plenty of times over the years about a major wrestling show being a historic event.

Most of the time, it’s hyperbole, or as the kids say, cap.

But Sunday afternoon (or night for the good folks in the United Kingdom), really was a historic happening not just for All Elite Wrestling but for all of professional wrestling, as 81,305 people packed into Wembley Stadium to witness All In — a world paid attendance record for professional wrestling.

And to think this all started with a challenge to put 10,000 people in an arena.

 

Did AEW deliver on such a monumental event? Here are my takeaways from the show:

What a moment for AEW and professional wrestling

When WWE does well, it usually only benefits WWE and not the industry as a whole. 

Evidence of this was WWE lording over the wrestling industry for nearly 20 years with very little competition before AEW came to be in 2019. WWE became the industry leader, but the industry was helped none. All WWE’s dominance did was make professional wrestling synonymous with the promotion’s three letters.

There is a large group of people in the world who still refer to any form of wrestling as that “WWE stuff.” That doesn’t help any other promotion sell one ticket.

AEW putting more than 80,000 people into a historic venue like Wembley Stadium actually does help the industry, as it shows that there are a lot of people who actually care about the unique sports/entertainment/art hybrid known as professional wrestling — so much so that it packs out football (both the gridiron kind and the pitch kind) stadiums around the world. 

It is a good look for the entire industry, not just AEW.

AEW should be very proud, as it sold a large chunk of those tickets before one match was announced. The novelty of AEW putting on a major show in the United Kingdom obviously helped, but it is a testament to the fan base the promotion has built during its four years of existence.

AEW apparently enjoys the arrangement it has with Wembley Stadium, as it will return to the venue next year for another All In.

More backstage drama

But what would a major AEW show be without some backstage drama? It is like they go hand-in-hand at this point. 

And it involves the promotion’s prominent name, CM Punk, again.

During the opening match on the card Sean Ross Sapp posted on X that Punk had been involved in a “physical confrontation” with Jack Perry prior to walking through the curtain for his match against Samoa Joe.

According to multiple reports (but h/t to Wrestling Inc.), the confrontation stemmed from a comment Perry made during his match against Hook on Zero Hour. Perry took a bump on the windshield of a limo he rode in for his entrance. 

He eventually stood up, looked at the camera and said “It’s real glass, cry me a river.”

This comment was apparently in reference to Perry wanting to use real glass during a match on Collision and Punk (rightly) putting the kibosh on it. This apparently angered Perry, prompting him to speak his mind during his match at All In.

Punk heard Perry’s comment and decided to check him right before he went through the curtain to open up one of the biggest wrestling shows of all time.

(Note: There have been conflicting reports about who approached who in this incident. Either way, it’s all bad.)

Enough already.

Is Perry wrong for saying what he said? I think so. There was no reason to do it and it is unprofessional to keep fanning these flames — especially after Punk, who seemingly has limitless power, had allegedly excommunicated multiple people from Collision, including management. If Perry really had something to say about it weeks after the fact, all he had to do was speak to Punk. Don’t go out on television and sneak diss.

Is Punk wrong for confronting Perry right before his own match? Yup, mainly because of the time and the place. Punk fashions himself as a locker room leader. A locker room leader does not try to physically confront anyone who dares speak ill of him, in my opinion.

I’m not saying Punk shouldn’t address these things. What Perry did was honestly childish and should be addressed. But how about we do this the professional way and talk about it? And that conversation does not have to happen right before the opening match. In fact, it doesn’t have to happen that day at all.

(Note: Again, there have been conflicting reports about who approached who in this incident. Either way, it’s all bad.)

The promotion is literally breaking worldwide attendance records. This squabble couldn’t have waited until tomorrow? Could we just cut the nonsense and push the egos to the side for one day? Not one day?

Bottom line: Both Perry and Punk’s actions were selfish and took away attention from the biggest event AEW has ever produced. The other people on that roster have worked too hard to let rubbish like this mar their day.

Smartly, AEW did not have Punk take part in the post-event media scrum, but something has to be done.

MJF and Adam Cole remain brochachos … for now

Fortunately for AEW, the drama right before the show’s opening match did not dampen the mood for the main event, which was the best match on the show by far.

The action in the ring was great, but the storytelling took this match to an even higher level. It was the best storytelling I have seen this year outside of the Bloodline. It was really well done.

And to make things even better, AEW has the rare opportunity to complete a full double turn. Time will tell if Adam Cole will flip to a full heel while MJF flips to being more of a good guy, but even having the opportunity to actually pull it off is pretty cool. Again, they don’t come around often.

I am very much looking forward to what’s next regarding these two.

Saraya wins with her family by her side

In probably the most touching moment of the event, Saraya won the AEW Women’s World Championship in her home country and with her family by her side.

Whether you agree with the decision to give Saraya the title or not, it made for a great moment for the fans in the United Kingdom.

I could not help but think of how much this could mean to Saraya, who has been through A LOT during her professional wrestling career. She was called up to WWE’s main roster and thrust into a top position at a very young age, had explicit photos and videos of her leaked online, was in an abusive romantic relationship with a coworker, and was told her career was over due to a severe neck injury.

Despite all of that adversity, Saraya was on top of the world in her home country Sunday.

Side note: Mercedes Moné was in the building Sunday. Maybe she can help make AEW put more than one women’s match on its major events …

Stadium Stampede was a bloody yet sort of fun mess

I’m not a big fan of the ultra-violent, ultra bloody style of wrestling, especially matches that include skewers being shoved into the top of someone’s head.

However, I was a fan of the end of Stadium Stampede, which saw a bloody Orange Cassidy pull off yet another miraculous win. I’ve written before about why I enjoy watching Cassidy so much, and Sunday was another example of it.

Yes, Cassidy did win after he punched someone in the head with a punch while his fist was covered in glass, but he only landed the move once, and it ended the match.

If you’re going to venture into ultra-violent territory, make the moves mean something.

Will Ospreay picks up another HUGE victory

It’s been quite a year for Will Ospreay with two big matches against Kenny Omega and another against Chris Jericho at Wembley Stadium.

It is one thing to be in the big matches. It is another to win them, and that is what Ospreay has done, starting at Forbidden Door against Omega and at All In against Jericho.

FTR stake their claim as the best in the world

If All In was supposed to determine the best tag team in the world, I believe FTR proved it during their win over the Young Bucks Sunday.

And since The Usos aren’t currently a tag team, I’m OK with giving FTR that honor. Objective rankings aside, all of the participants in this match held up their end of the bargain as this was the second-best match on show, in my opinion.

The Acclaimed hosts the world’s largest scissor party

Isn’t it wild how over The Acclaimed is? I mean, they had 80,000 people at historic Wembley Stadium screaming about scissoring each other, which is both NSFW and hilarious at the same time.

AEW All In London results: CM Punk retains ‘Real’ world title against old foe Samoa Joe

See how CM Punk retained his Real World Championship against Samoa Joe at AEW All In London.

CM Punk is wearing ring gear that calls to mind his ROH days, but that’s not winning him too much favor with the fans, who appear to be solidly backing Samoa Joe. Punk is smiling through the early exchanges, perhaps thinking he’s in Joe’s head.

Joe finally gets Punk cornered a bit and lights him up with chops, as he is wont to do. Punk responds with a hurricanrana, then hears it from the crowd … and again when he misses a move to the floor.

The smiles have switched to Joe’s face as he smashes Punk through the bottom of the announce table, bloodying his foe. A back elbow won’t help Punk feel any better, you’d imagine, but he’s able to kick out at one.

After some more offense leaves both men down, Punk gains the upper hand, cupping his hand to his ear before dropping an elbow but seeing Joe pop right back up. Punk tries begging off but gets caught with right hands and a powerslam for two.

Joe’s powerbomb gets another two, and he quickly switches to an STF. A running kick lands for Punk, who does a spinning toe hold as an homage to Terry Funk. Joe pulls off an inside cradle of sorts and gets a two count.

Punk wants a running knee strike but sees it countered for a second time. But he’s able to connect on a Pepsi Plunge, and that keeps Joe down for three and the gold in Punk’s possession.

Click here for full AEW All In 2023 results.

AEW All In London results: MJF, Adam Cole prove friendship the real winner at Wembley

Follow along with one of the biggest shows in pro wrestling history with live AEW All In results from London’s Wembley Stadium.

The wait is over, Wembley Stadium. London is playing host to one of the biggest wrestling shows of all time as AEW stages its first ever U.K. event in the most grandiose possible fashion. More than 80,000 fans are expected to experience AEW All In London in person, which is quite the accomplishment for a company that is only a few years old.

It certainly helps that AEW has one of the hottest storylines in all of wrestling going right now to fuel the show’s main event. Adam Cole nearly defeated MJF several months ago for a shot at the AEW World Championship. Then the two men got thrown together unwillingly as a tag team.

Instead of being a disaster, it turned into an unlikely bonding experience where MJF embraced his face side, and Better Than You, Bay Bay was born. The two friends have experienced moments of tension at times but always ended up hugging it out.

That ends tonight, when they’ll meet for the world title at Wembley (though not before teaming to try for tag team gold first). Will one of them finally turn on the other with the stakes this high? It should be very entertaining to find out.

The All In card is also loaded to the hilt with other championship matches (four more besides the main event), a Tag Team Coffin match, and the spectacle that is Stadium Stampede. Plus the man who might be the best wrestler on the planet right now, Will Ospreay, will take on an icon in Chris Jericho.

We’re certainly envious of everyone in attendance in London. Here we go.

AEW All In London results:

(click on any match with a link for full details)

AEW All In London start time: What time does All In start?

Here’s when you’ll need to tune in for AEW All London from Wembley Stadium.

For the first time since 2018, AEW All In will transpire later this week. While a different look compared to the groundbreaking event that Matt and Nick Jackson and Cody Rhodes organized, the spirit of the show remains the same: defy expectations to put on an incomparable pro wrestling event.

When All In London was first announced earlier this year, it was eye-opening that AEW decided to go for Wembley Stadium, a venue that can hold 90,000 people, considering it had never orchestrated an international show or even a stadium show before.

However, AEW shocked everyone by, as of Aug. 22, selling 81,103 tickets for All In. This remarkable feat for a young pro wrestling company speaks volumes about the level of interest in this show.

Before announcing any match, including the headliner of MJF vs. Adam Cole for the AEW World Championship, tens of thousands of tickets had already been sold. Building the rest of the card only sparked more interest in what AEW will offer in the UK.

Before they battle for the world title in the main event, MJF and Cole must work together to face Aussie Open for the ROH Tag Team Championship at Zero Hour. Tensions will inevitably build between the two friends as their match approaches to end the night, so it is almost certain that something will happen to spark angst.

CM Punk will face Samoa Joe in another headlining match for the Real World Championship in London, reigniting their decades-long rivalry. Punk has been in the news lately for the wrong reasons, but for one night, that will shift aside when he faces his longtime foe.

All In goes down on Sunday, Aug. 27. The main card will have a start time of 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT on PPV, with Zero Hour headlined by the tag title match beginning one hour earlier.

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Updated AEW All In London card: 1 match added, changes made on Dynamite

Check out all the matches confirmed for AEW All In London, one of the biggest events in pro wrestling history.

Even in the home stretch to AEW All In London, Tony Khan suggested additions and changes would be made. That proved to be the case during AEW Dynamite this week, when one popular match was added to the show at Wembley Stadium and several alterations were made as well.

Billy Gunn made his return to assist The Acclaimed against the House of Black, and revealed that he has one more match in him. He’ll join his “sons” to take on the House for the AEW World Trios Championship in London.

A vicious assault by Blackpool Combat Club put Rey Fenix in an ambulance, taking him off the All In card. But the real surprise was who helped the BCC: a returning Santana and Ortiz, who will join them at All In to make the Stadium Stampede match a five-on-five affair.

Last but not least, Swerve Strickland unceremoniously fired AR Fox from the Mogul Embassy, meaning he needed a new partner for the Coffin match — and found one in Christian Cage.

Adam Cole and MJF will headline All In with their bromance-turned-competitive match, as MJF defends his AEW World Championship. Before that, however, they will join forces on the Zero Hour pre-show to challenge Aussie Open for the ROH World Tag Team Championship. It will be intriguing to see how this impacts their singles match later in the evening, especially if it creates tension that hints at a heel turn.

In two other tag team matches at All In, FTR will defend the AEW World Tag Team Championship against the Young Bucks, and Darby Allin and Sting will face off against Swerve Strickland and AR Fox in a Coffin match.

We’ll update this post if/when more matches are made official. For now, here’s what has been revealed for Wembley Stadium this month.

Latest update: Aug. 26, 2023, 2:00 p.m. ET.

AEW All In 2023 card:

  •  Aussie Open (c) vs. MJF and Adam Cole – ROH World Tag Team Championship match (Zero Hour pre-show)
  • Jack Perry (c) vs. Hook – FTW Championship match (Zero Hour pre-show)
  • MJF (c) vs. Adam Cole – AEW World Championship match
  • CM Punk (c) vs. Samoa Joe – “Real World Championship” match
  • Hikaru Shida (c) vs. Toni Storm vs. Saraya vs. TBD – AEW Women’s World Championship match
  • FTR (c) vs. The Young Bucks – AEW World Tag Team Championship match
  • House of Black (c) vs. The Acclaimed and Billy Gunn – AEW World Trios Championship
  • Darby Allin and Sting vs. Swerve Strickland and Christian Cage – Coffin match
  • The Golden Elite (Kota Ibushi, Kenny Omega and “Hangman” Adam Page) vs. Bullet Club Gold (Juice Robinson and Jay White) and Konosuke Takeshita
  • Chris Jericho vs. Will Ospreay
  • Eddie Kingston, Penta El Zero Miedo and Best Friends (Orange Cassidy, Chuck Taylor and Trent Beretta) vs. Blackpool Combat Club (Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli and Wheeler Yuta), Mike Santana and Ortiz – Stadium Stampede match

How to watch AEW All In: PPV, live stream, international markets

Ready for AEW All In London? Here’s how to make sure you’re watching live on Sunday.

AEW will host All In for the first time since its groundbreaking event in 2018, from Wembley Stadium in London, England — a show that has broken attendance records for a pro wrestling show.

AEW has built the show around Adam Cole and MJF. When Cole failed to get an AEW World Championship opportunity, it seemed like the door had been shut, but these foes ultimately became allies, and they put out some of the most entertaining content AEW has ever seen and changed that.

Before they take on each other for the world title in the main event, Cole and MJF will team up to challenge Aussie Open for the ROH Tag Team Championship in the All In Zero Hour. How the match transpires may determine the outcome of the main event.

CM Punk and Samoa Joe will continue their decades-long rivalry with a singles match for the Real World Championship. It remains uncertain how significant this modified AEW World Championship is, but nonetheless, these former ROH opponents will face off in London for hardware.

The action will transpire from London on Sunday afternoon. Here’s everything you need to know to watch All In:

AEW All In 2023

United States and Canada

  • Cable TV: Available on all major U.S. & Canadian providers, including Xfinity, Spectrum, Contour, Fios, U-verse and Optimum, among others (U.S.); Rogers, Bell, Shaw, SaskTel and TELUS (Canada)
  • Satellite TV: DIRECTV and DISH
  • Digital Streaming: Bleacher Report (Web, Mobile, Roku, Xbox, FireTV,  Apple TV)

Bar & Restaurant locations

  • Select Dave & Buster’s locations
  • Select Tom’s Watch Bar locations

International Markets

  • Cable/Satellite providers in Canada
  • FITE​​.TV
  • YouTube (Canada, Mexico, Germany, Italy, France, UK, South Korea)
  • PPV.com (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, UK and Ireland)
  • SKY Germany – (Germany)
  • SKY Italia – (Italy)
  • DAZN (UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Netherlands, Mexico, Brazil, France, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, Poland, Portugal, Thailand, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore, Bulgaria)

AEW Collision results 08/19/23: CM Punk has a surprise for Samoa Joe

AEW Collision from Lexington made one more match official for All In and several matches for All Out as well.

Even though we’re only eight days away from what is being billed as the biggest event in pro wrestling history, one gets the impression that the card isn’t quite finalized just yet. Fortunately, there are several AEW shows between now and then, one of which is AEW Collision tonight in Lexington.

The home of the Kentucky Wildcats won’t see too many big matches, though the main event between Darby Allin and Christian Cage is definitely intriguing. For a completely different reason, plenty of eyes will be on the segment where we’ll hear from FTR. It should be a talking point, let’s put it that way.

Let’s take a trip to Lexington together and find out what’s

AEW Collision Fight for the Fallen results:

  • Samoa Joe is supposed to have a squash match with “The Golden Vampire,” who stuns him with a quick assault and a GTS … then reveals himself to be CM Punk, who says “I accept, bitch” to Joe’s challenge for a match at All In
  • Jay White def. Dalton Castle by pinfall
  • Tony Schiavone talks to Bullet Club Gold, and White has a message for Kenny Omega: Gold is going to show it’s a cut above The Elite in London; also The Gunns and Juice Robinson want a match tonight, so the Iron Savages come out to accept their challenge
  • The Gunns and Juice Robinson def. Iron Savages by pinfall with White sitting in on guest commentary
  • A video message from House of Black is their version of a funeral for Billy Gunn
  • Rush wants to rebuild LFI and seems like he’s willing to go to some pretty wild lengths to do it
  • Ricky Starks talks to Schiavone and insists that he’s going to bring chaos live tonight … possibly with Big Bill?
  • There’s also a pre-recorded Starks promo before he accompanies Big Bill to the ring
  • Big Bill def. Derek Neal by pinfall in a quick squash match, and Starks lashes Neal with his belt after the match
  • Willow Nightingale def. Diamante by pinfall, with Kris Statlander arriving to help keep Mercedes Martinez at bay at ringside
  • Toni Storm is still confused about who’s interviewing her and offended that anyone would question the loyalty that The Outcasts have for each other
  • Powerhouse Hobbs def. Kevin Ku by pinfall, then puts him in Miro’s submission hold; Miro appears on the big screen to … challenge Hobbs, we guess?
  • Darby Allin def. Christian Cage by pinfall despite intervention by Luchasaurus
  • After the match, Schiavone talks to Allin, who is smashed from behind by Cage and chokeslammed by Luchasaurus, which amuses Swerve Strickland and AR Fox watching backstage

20 best WWE finishers of all time: The best finishing moves ever

Finishing moves come and go in WWE, but these 20 are the best we’ve ever seen.

There’s something undeniably thrilling about the best WWE finishers. Just the anticipation for an especially great finishing move is a lot of fun, the palpable feeling that ripples through the crowd when a match is about to reach its dramatic conclusion.

And those occasions where a wrestler unexpectedly kicks out of a top finisher — provided they don’t happen too often — produce some of the loudest crowd reactions in the business.

Thanks to its position as the No. 1 pro wrestling company in the world for decades (even during times it didn’t want to admit it), WWE has seen more than its fair share of amazing finishing moves. But we wanted to dive in and find the ones that were truly the best, the crème de la crème of match-ending maneuvers.

To do that, we consulted a number of lists of this type that are already out there, including the WWE’s own rankings of the 50 best finishing moves of all time. Like our list of the top WWE PPVs ever, that makes this list pseudo-crowdsourced and not just our own opinions — though we slid some up or down where we felt it was warranted.

So what makes a truly great finishing move? The answer varies from fan to fan, but we considered the following:

  • Recognizability/cultural impact – Is a finisher so famous that even casual or non-wrestling fans know what it is or who does it?
  • Believability – If pro wrestling wasn’t scripted, does the move look like it would really end a fight?
  • Uniqueness – Does the move stand out on its own, or does a certain performer elevate it by adding more atmosphere to it?
  • Sellability – Does it offer the person on the receiving end the opportunity to play it up even more?
  • Legacy – Has it passed the test of time, even if others don’t use it as a finisher?

Now that that’s out of the way, let’s dive in and check out what we found to be a bit of a consensus on the 20 best WWE finishers of all time, starting at 20 and working down to No. 1.